A Year of Hope for Joplin and Johnson
In 1910, the boxer Jack Johnson and the musician Scott Joplin embodied a new sense of possibility for African-Americans
- By Michael Walsh
- Smithsonian magazine, June 2010, Subscribe
On that fourth of July afternoon 100 years ago, the eyes of the world turned to a makeshift wooden arena that had been hastily assembled in Reno, Nevada. Special deputies confiscated firearms, and movie cameras rolled as a crowd estimated at 20,000 filled the stands surrounding a boxing ring. The celebrities at ringside included fight royalty—John L. Sullivan and James “Gentleman Jim” Corbett—and the novelist Jack London. For the first time in U.S. history, two champions—one reigning, the other retired but undefeated—were about to square off to determine the rightful heavyweight king of the world. But more than a title was at stake.
In one corner stood James Jackson Jeffries, the “Boilermaker,” who had retired undefeated six years earlier to farm alfalfa in sunny Burbank, California. The Ohio native had lived in Los Angeles since his teenage years, fighting his way up the ranks until he defeated the British-born Bob Fitzsimmons for the heavyweight championship in 1899. But now, at 35, Jim Jeffries was long past his prime. Six feet one and a half inches tall, he weighed 227 pounds, only two above his old fighting weight—but he had shed more than 70 to get there.
In the other corner was John “Jack” Arthur Johnson, the “Galveston Giant,” who had taken the title a year and a half before from Tommy Burns in Sydney, Australia, beating the Canadian fighter so badly that the referee stopped the fight in the 14th round. At 206 pounds, Johnson was lighter than Jeffries, but he was also three years younger, only an inch and a quarter shorter and immeasurably fitter. His head was shaved and his smile flashed gold and everything about him seemed larger than life, including his love of clothes, cars and women. Johnson had everything in his favor except that he was African-American.
A New York Times editorial summed up a common view: “If the black man wins, thousands and thousands of his ignorant brothers will misinterpret his victory as justifying claims to much more than physical equality with their white neighbors.” Jeffries was blunter: “I am going into this fight for the sole purpose of proving that a white man is better than a Negro.”
One of the nation’s first celebrity athletes, Jack Johnson also provided a rough foreshadowing of the political theories of a 42-year-old educator from Great Barrington, Massachusetts, named W.E.B. Du Bois. William Edward Burghardt Du Bois was the first African-American to receive a PhD from Harvard and was a founder of the new National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. He had concluded that to achieve racial equality, black people would first have to seize political power by organizing, demanding their rights and not backing down.
Such were the stakes when the bell rang for the first round of what would be called the Fight of the Century.
At about the same time, another African-American was making history on the other side of the country. In a boardinghouse at 128 West 29th Street in New York City—a block from Tin Pan Alley—Scott Joplin was feverishly putting the finishing touches on the libretto and score of an opera he was certain would be his masterpiece: Treemonisha.
A mild-mannered, self-effacing man who was in almost every way the opposite of Jack Johnson, Joplin had shot to fame in 1899 with the publication of the “Maple Leaf Rag,” the first million-selling piece of instrumental sheet music in America. Born in the last half of 1867 near Texarkana, Texas, to Giles and Florence Joplin, a freedman and a freeborn woman, he grew up with five siblings on the black side of town. He studied piano with a German-born teacher named Julius Weiss, who exposed him to European musical culture. Joplin left home early, kicked around Texas and the Mississippi River Valley as a saloon and bordello pianist, spent time in St. Louis and Chicago, and took music courses at the George R. Smith College in Sedalia, Missouri, about 90 miles east of Kansas City. In 1907, after a failed marriage and the death of his second wife, Joplin moved to New York.
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Comments (7)
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Posted by Missouri car dealership on November 18,2012 | 01:47 AM
The Article mentions a unnamed Black Constable killed in Mounds Illinois July 1910. A lawman was killed in this place at that time. Here are the facts:
His name was Wesley Davis
He was a deputy Sherriff
A contemporary article mentions the incident in which he was killed-but does not give his skin color. http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GSln=Davis&GSfn=W&GSbyrel=in&GSdy=1910&GSdyrel=in&GSob=n&GRid=44041425&
Posted by T.Fazzini on July 7,2010 | 10:46 AM
jack johnson's fight was in Reno, checkout the brilliant Ken Burns documentary Unforgiveable Blackness for the life story of Jack Johnson
Posted by john radford on June 15,2010 | 03:51 PM
The video of this fight is available on YouTube- just search for Johnson vs Jeffries fight.
Posted by Heather on June 9,2010 | 04:32 PM
Ms. de Dufour,
The fight between Jack Johnson and Jim Jeffries most definitely took place in Reno, Nevada. Perhaps you were thinking of the 1897 exhibition fights between Jeffries and Jim Corbett that were held in Carson City, Nevada.
Posted by Lyn Garrity, Associate Editor on June 2,2010 | 01:47 PM
A remarkable article - brought home the realities of racism and how deeply embedded they are. I was surprised to read of Jack London's view of things - I would have expected something different, given his commitments to the underdog. Thanks for making this available.
Posted by Tom on May 26,2010 | 09:23 AM
The Johnson-Jeffries fight occurred in Carson City, NV NOT Reno, NV. Please check your facts.
Posted by Karyn de Dufour on May 25,2010 | 11:57 AM